
7 August 2024 | 3 replies
If you are beyond that, see if the owner will let you in to adjust the system.

6 August 2024 | 12 replies
Vrbo doesn't automatically charge it, they ask them for the payment.

7 August 2024 | 17 replies
Many who have invested passively in real estate the past few years are in deals not going well and they are much more risk averse and are doing a lot more due diligence (unfortunately from lessons learned from not doing it previously)Plus as mentioned risk free return vs risk adjusted return does not make it very enticing for investorsWhen it gets to deploying capital we have more deals than we know what to do with.

13 August 2024 | 69 replies
Many Multi-family properties now in debt service trouble as the GPs took out very risky 2-3 yr floating rate or adjustable loans so they could cash flow after buying very expensive 3Cap apartments, which loans have gone from 1.5% to 5% or higher, and knowing that obvious and predictable risk since every primate could see mega-inflation coming in early 2021 due to more money printed in 2 yrs than first 200 yrs of country, They "smartly" took out Rate Cap insurance, (cost 50k for a 12 month policy on 10mil loan to cap variable insurance rise about 1-1.5% above the origination level) but now that US 10yr up 10x from 0.31 in 3/2020 to 4.2%, that same insurance policy is 1.5-2.0 million not 50K, so They can't cover the much higher debt service nor buy new cap insurance without shutting down distributions or capital calls.

8 August 2024 | 14 replies
Inflation, for instance, can raise property prices, but this doesn't necessarily translate into a real increase in value when adjusted for the cost of living.Demand can also drive appreciation, but there are factors that could cause demand to decrease.

6 August 2024 | 1 reply
While it's exciting to see rates potentially coming down, I wonder how quickly lenders will adjust their offerings.

8 August 2024 | 17 replies
Usually helocs are adjustable rates, so the rate will come down as the interest rates go down.

6 August 2024 | 15 replies
I want to know my payment is fixed for the foreseeable future and can adjust accordingly if needed.

6 August 2024 | 6 replies
Any costs, term adjustments, or any problems should be made clear by lenders.

7 August 2024 | 6 replies
For the month to month tenant you can change their lease rate as you see fit… but if you are changing it significantly you should phase it in to help them have time to adjust and prepare for it (in my opinion)… maybe across 2-3 months.It’s likely that your tenants are use to each other having already lived next to each other.